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Hi This Is Flume

Hi This Is Flume is the first mixtape released by Australian electronic musician Flume. It was released on 20 March 2019 by Future Classic. The mixtape follows the release of Flume's Skin: The Remixes in 2017. Hi This Is Flume was announced on 19 March 2019, only days after Flume's documentary When Everything Was New was released to YouTube. Flume began working on the album away from the public eye from 2017, following his commercially-successful album Skin and its world tour.

Hi This Is Flume

20 March 2019 (2019-03-20)

38:10

The mixtape is a more experimental record compared to Flume's previous work, and contains features from several of his favourite artists such as Slowthai, JPEGMafia and frequent collaborator Kučka, as well as guest production from HWLS, Sophie and Eprom. A remix of Sophie's "Is It Cold in the Water?" from her 2018 album Oil of Every Pearl's Un-Insides by Flume and Eprom is also included. An accompanying visual for the mixtape directed by Jonathan Zawada, who had also designed the artwork for Flume's album Skin, was released and premiered on YouTube on release day. The mixtape was released to positive reviews, with music critics complimenting its experimental style.


The mixtape was nominated for Best Dance/Electronic Album at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards, becoming Flume's second nomination for the category and third overall.[1]

Background and recording[edit]

Following the release of his second album Skin in May 2016, Flume embarked on a world tour in support of the album for the rest of the year.[2] He further released Skin Companion EP 1 in November of that year and Skin Companion EP 2 in February 2017,[3] and also worked with Vince Staples and Lorde on their respective albums Big Fish Theory and Melodrama in June.[4][5] After Skin touring responsibilities wrapped up in January 2018, he subsequently decided to keep a low public profile as he was "working so hard" that he started "to hate music [and] touring" and "needed to live a normal life for a bit".[6]


While working on the mixtape, Flume felt that he needed to create a record with a more experimental sound in order to go "back to [his] roots",[6] and added that he changed his style because he was bored at doing "the same thing over and over" and "people copy [him]".[7] In an AMA on Reddit, he revealed that the production on Hi This Is Flume was far more difficult than on his previous records as there was "way more detail", though "the ideas flowed more easily on [the mixtape] than Skin".[8] He also revealed that the synth used most on the mixtape was "good old sylenth1",[9] but that "a fair bit of synplant" was also used, while the distortion plug used is the "Black Box Analog Design HG-2".[10]


Speaking to Triple J, Flume explained that, through the mixtape, he wanted to expose listeners "to more left-field electronic music", as well as artists such as Slowthai, JPEGMafia, Eprom, and Sophie. He additionally discussed working with the featured artists on the record. He revealed that he discovered English rapper Slowthai through the track "T N Biscuits", immediately decided that he wanted to "work with this guy", and consequently traveled to the United Kingdom to record the song "High Beams" with him. The recording session in Los Angeles with American hip hop artist JPEGMafia lasted one day, and when the two had finished writing the first verse, Flume suggested that the rapper "just talk shit for the rest of it", to which JPEGMafia replied "Alright, I'm great at that!" The two also enjoyed "mess[ing] around on all the hardware" together in the studio which included a Roland TR-8 drum machine and the Prophet X sampler/synthesizer. Flume, Scottish producer Sophie and Kučka began working on the track "Voices" when they met during the Skin world tour in 2016 at the Sidney Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne, when Sophie created sounds from an Elektron FM Synth, which Flume sampled for the track's beat.[11]

Musical style[edit]

Hi This Is Flume has been characterised by critics as an experimental,[12][13] IDM,[14] wonky[15] and electronica mixtape.[16] Christina Hernandez of Dancing Astronaut described the record as a "complete change of pace from Skin" due to its abstract musical style, and Flume's "most idiosyncratic work to date";[13] Steve Kavakos of Australian GQ noted that the mixtape "falls away from any mainstream elements" and marks a return to the sound found on Flume's eponymous debut album.[17] It consists of seventeen tracks, many of them under two minutes long, with each ending transitioning smoothly into the beginning of the next.[12][18]

Release and promotion[edit]

Just before New Year's Day of 2019, Flume posted a picture of himself holding a glass of wine in a swimming hole in Byron Hinterland, and wrote that he would "be back in your life" that year.[19] On 13 March, Flume made available the documentary Flume: When Everything Was New on his YouTube channel; the film had previously been released in April 2018 on Apple Music alongside Sleepless: The Story of Future Classic, which documented the rise of Flume's record label.[20][21][22]


On 19 March, Flume announced on social media that he would release a mixtape, titled Hi This Is Flume, through his label Future Classic the next day.[23][24] On the same day, a snippet of a then-unknown track from his upcoming record soundtracked a teaser for the Chicago Lollapalooza music festival, for which he was announced as a headliner.[25][26] On 20 March, Flume released the mixtape, accompanied by a 42-minute visual directed by Jonathan Zawada,[27] who had previously created the artwork for Flume's second album Skin.[28]

Chart performance[edit]

In the United States, Hi This Is Flume debuted at number nine on the Dance/Electronic Albums chart with 3,000 equivalent album units sold, making it Flume's third entry in the top 10 of that chart.[33] It reached its peak of number two on the chart the following week.[34] It entered the US Billboard 200 chart at its peak of number 185.[35] In New Zealand and Flume's native Australia, the mixtape debuted at its peak of number 11 on the countries' respective album charts.[36][37]